| 1864 - 472 pages
...Eton is strongest : and it is well that this is so. It seems to me that, for the class frequentiug Eton, the grand aim of education should be to give...at last, Mr. Hawtrey's ideal of the family, as the typo for the school, comes in its due place ; for the children of poverty it is right, it is needful... | |
| 1864 - 556 pages
...frequenting Eton, the grand aim of education should be to give them those good things which their birth ami rearing are least likely to give them ; to give them...gentleness, humanity. Here, at last, Mr. Hawtrey's ideal of tho family, as the type for the school, comes in its due place ; for the children of poverty it is... | |
| Sir George Grove, David Masson, John Morley, Mowbray Morris - 1864 - 580 pages
...frequenting Eton, the grand aim ot education should be to give them those good things which their birth aud rearing are least likely to give them ; to give them...to the lower class, feeling, gentleness, humanity. Hero, at last, Mr. Hawtrey 's ideal of the family, as the type for the school, comee iu its due place... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1892 - 476 pages
...proposition that the family is the type of the school. I do not think that is true for the schools of all classes alike. I feel sure my father, whose authority...Hawtrey's ideal of the family as the type for the school, conies in its due place; for the children of poverty it is right, it is needful to set oneself first... | |
| Sir Joshua Girling Fitch - 1897 - 304 pages
...things which their birth and rearing are least likely to give them, to give them (besides book learning) the notion of a sort of republican fellowship, the...be to give largeness of soul and personal dignity ;" and to the^ lower class — feeling, gentleness, humanity.* The details collected bjr Arnold from... | |
| William Harbutt Dawson - 1904 - 482 pages
...especially in the residential school, the ideas and the stimulus they could not hope to receive at home. ' ' It seems to me that for the class frequenting Eton...to the lower class, feeling, gentleness, humanity." And, coming to practical measures: " What is really needed," he wrote later in an essay significantly... | |
| William Harbutt Dawson - 1904 - 552 pages
...especially in the residential school, the ideas and the stimulus they could not hope to receive at home. " It seems to me that for the class frequenting Eton...to the lower class, feeling, gentleness, humanity." And, coming to practical measures: " What is really needed," he wrote later in an essay significantly... | |
| William Harbutt Dawson - 1904 - 470 pages
...especially in the residential school, the ideas and the stimulus they could not hope to receive at home. ' ' It seems to me that for the class frequenting Eton...common, the habit of selfhelp. To the middle class jhejgrand aim of education shcmldj>e .to_g^eJassn^s^QLs_Qul and personal digvHity; tothelov?€C.Qlas§K&§Jing»-g£Qt... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1912 - 320 pages
...of education should be to give them those good things which their birth and rearing are least likely to give them, besides mere book-learning, the notion...largeness of soul and personal dignity ; to the lower classes, feeling, gentleness, humanity. Here, at last, Mr. Hawtrey's ideal of the family as the type... | |
| Matthew Arnold - 1912 - 320 pages
...of education should be to give them those good things which their birth and rearing are least likely to give them, besides mere book-learning, the notion...of a plain life in common, the habit of self-help. TCL the jmrd31e_cla.ss, the grand aim of education should be to give largeness of soul and pe.rsonal... | |
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